Chasing after that "American Dream" aye mate? Well good luck dude.... LA... join a gang... get sent to jail... then get gangbanged >.>...
american history x But for real, America, despite what people say, ATM, is the best place to live [other than the U.A.E.] the commas are there for a reason
Jstar1 wrote:america where are you moving? like which state?
california
Last edited by Barotix on Tue Jan 22, 2008 9:20 pm, edited 2 times in total.
awesome, I myself will prolly immigrate to the US in the future most probably after I have finished University. Since I was growing up it just seemed like a really cool place.
JacksColon wrote:I've never been to L.A. although I hear it's a shit hole Visit San Diego and San Francisco. Those are supposed to be very nice. And, come to Florida sometime. We'll go to bars or something
Hehe been to San Diego, saw sea world and all the battle ships. San Francisco was nice as well with the Golden Gate bridge.
Bad news, well apparently my parents found out the best schools in the US are on the East coast (esp. Boston/New York). But the worst thing is, most schools in America are co-ed. So big change of plans now we're not sure where we're going.
Lol, almost all schools in north america are Co-Ed. Frankly I don't see the point of a school that's male/female only, because it just makes you anti social with the opposite sex...alright, more than regularly...
Lol, almost all schools in north america are Co-Ed. Frankly I don't see the point of a school that's male/female only, because it just makes you anti social with the opposite sex...alright, more than regularly...
Well Co- Ed school normally do worse academically being anti social with the opposite sex is the least of my worries, but if academics isnt a problemI have no problem going co-ed.
You do realize that having relatively average people around you would make you stand out academically. You can get high 90's easily with little studying because teachers won't be expecting much from the students so test level drops.
As long as a school offers academic programs it really doesn't matter where you go.
torinchibi wrote:You do realize that having relatively average people around you would make you stand out academically. You can get high 90's easily with little studying because teachers won't be expecting much from the students so test level drops.
As long as a school offers academic programs it really doesn't matter where you go.
That would make me a real loser, and if I did that I wouldn't be XuChu. in the college admission exams SATs in the US I will get lower compared to other people in the better schools.
Lol, almost all schools in north america are Co-Ed. Frankly I don't see the point of a school that's male/female only, because it just makes you anti social with the opposite sex...alright, more than regularly...
Well Co- Ed school normally do worse academically being anti social with the opposite sex is the least of my worries, but if academics isnt a problemI have no problem going co-ed.
High School education is neligible; it's your post secondary studies that are going to matter, and you can live on campus anywhere in the US/Canada for that (in many cases, it's cheaper to study in Canada!)
Lol, almost all schools in north america are Co-Ed. Frankly I don't see the point of a school that's male/female only, because it just makes you anti social with the opposite sex...alright, more than regularly...
Well Co- Ed school normally do worse academically being anti social with the opposite sex is the least of my worries, but if academics isnt a problemI have no problem going co-ed.
High School education is neligible; it's your post secondary studies that are going to matter, and you can live on campus anywhere in the US/Canada for that (in many cases, it's cheaper to study in Canada!)
IMO it is not negligible because without good exam results you won't be in any top Universities. Studying in Canada, I froze my ass off in -30 degrees in Canada when I went. News paper says its biggest blizzard in 60 yrs, I don't think I can live there.
XuChu wrote: IMO it is not negligible because without good exam results you won't be in any top Universities. Studying in Canada, I froze my ass off in -30 degrees in Canada when I went. News paper says its biggest blizzard in 60 yrs, I don't think I can live there.
But thanks for the thought
It's not as hard as they say to get into the Universities. If you work hard you'll get in; it's funding that's harder for most people.